Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Rohit sets the pace, India in charge Spinners hope to exploit cracks

COMEBACK The opener returns to Test cricket scoring his second century to help give India a firm grip of the first Test

- Abhishek Paul abhishek.paul@htlive.com Abhisek Paul abhishek.paul@htlive.com

VISAKHAPAT­NAM: Rohit Sharma danced down the track against Dane Piedt and lofted the spinner’s length ball over long off. It was the sixth over after lunch, and the Indian opener’s shot was as perfectly controlled as any that he played during his century in the first innings.

Yet this six, Sharma’s ninth in the match, was a special one. It had a statistica­l underlinin­g. This was the most sixes ever hit by an Indian in a Test, surpassing Navjot Singh Sidhu. By the time Sharma would get out to Keshav Maharaj at 127 he would hit four more to take his tally to 13, the highest ever hit by a batsman in a Test.

Sharma’s true success lies not in the number of sixes but the way he dictated the pace of the second innings and helped India reach 323/4 to give the Proteas a target of 395.

In the first innings, Sharma had a lot riding on him—the pressure of rebooting a Test career as an opener, with young players like Shubman Gill and Prithvi Shaw waiting to pounce for a chance. A duck in the warm-up match didn’t help matters either. But he overcame all of that with a 244-ball 176.

With the opening blues sorted, Sharma came out blazing in his second innings—he reached his second hundred on the trot in

Scores

Batsman and opposition

just 133 balls. With the help of 10 fours and seven sixes, he finished on 127 off 149 balls. With 303 runs in his first Test as opener, Sharma has made the strongest possible claim to that everchangi­ng slot, and he has done it playing his natural game.

“Hitting sixes is his (Sharma’s) strength, he has excelled in white ball cricket. The way he hits sixes is incredible and as Test batsman who wants to improve his ODI and T20 cricket, there is lots to learn from him. Especially when it comes hitting the ball out of the park,” was what Cheteshwar Pujara, who shared a 169-run stand with Sharma, had to say about the century.

That Sharma’s twin century has come on a flat track at home may be a caveat, but then Visakhatpa­tnam has the reputation of reviving careers. Remember that 148 off 155 balls against Pakistan by MS Dhoni in 2005? It was the first of his ODI tons and consolidat­ed his place in the team, sparking off one of the most phenomenal careers in Indian cricketing history.

Pujara revealed that the pitch at the ACA-VDCA Stadium was not an easy to bat on as it might have looked from the outside. “It was not easy to rotate the strike, it was not easy to time the ball,” he said. “Early on, it was a twopaced pitch against fast bowlers and even against spinners.”

Sharma’s task was cut out in t he second i nnings. South Africa’s tail wagged a bit too long and India had a lead of 71. Intent to score quick runs without losing too many wickets was the need of the hour if India were to press for a victory. Sharma did just that.

The South Africans bowled a discipline­d line but Sharma looked to have made up his mind on making the day his own.

Even in ODI cricket Sharma is not a fast starter; he gets more and more devastatin­g as he settles in. In all the three double hundreds that Sharma has scored in the 50-over format, he went into his hitting spree only after completing the first 50 runs. On Saturday, Sharma was in a different mode.

He slapped left-arm spinner Keshav Maharaj through midwicket boundary to open his scoring and continued in the same vein throughout. At least on two occasions Sharma survived close calls—once when Quinton de Kock fell short of stumping him off Maharaj, and then when Senuran Muthusamy touched the ropes while attempting a catch off Dane Piedt while he was on 50.

With Mayank Agarwal gone early and Pujara taking his own sweet time to settle in, Sharma took charge. He was especially brutal towards the spinners, scoring most of his record number of sixed off them. With spinners and fast bowlers, he worked the gaps with ease.the way he directed Maharaj towards backward point in two consecutiv­e deliveries or the way he forced a Piedt delivery towards midwicket—or the one where he sweeped the same bowler from outside off stump—were all signs of a batsman completely in control of what he wants to do.

“When I came into bat, the way Rohit was batting, I felt we were scoring at a decent pace and I could take some extra time to settle down,” Pujara said.

“He batted really well in the first innings also but in the second the situation was different. To play all those strokes that he did on this wicket…that partnershi­p was crucial. Our communicat­ion was good as he we have bat t e d t oget her s i nce our under-19 days. It was a joy to watch him from the non striker’s end.”

Sharma scored at a strike-rate of over 70 and once Pujara began to open up, India cruised. The highlight of the day came when Sharma blasted Piedt for three straight sixes—one went over long on, the second fell in the mid wicket stands while the third sailed over long off—it was the perf e c t c ul mination of an innings that had aggression written all over it.

After that barrage of sixes, Sharma could add just one run more, but by then he had done exactly what he needed to do. VISAKHAPAT­NAM: Ravindra Jadeja has always been fervent in his appeals, and his enthusiasm often gets the better of him while taking a DRS call, many of which have led to wasted chances in the past. Saturday was different.

With a target of 395, South Africa’s first innings centurion Dean Elgar had started cautiously. He knew Virat Kohli would let loose his spinners on the Proteas after the hosts had declared on 323/4. Yet there was little he could do when, in the fourth over, a Jadeja delivery stayed low and skidded onto his pads. The umpire believed it had brushed off the bat before hitting the pads, but Jadeja was convinced otherwise. Kohli took a long time to agree with the spinner to go for a review, but when he did, it ended in cheers.

And just like that India had scalped South Africa’s top-scorer in the first innings to leave a dent in their hope of saving the match. At 11/1 at stumps on Day 4, the Proteas need 384 more to win, and a day of gritty spin bowling to look forward to on a pitch where the ball is staying erraticall­y low.

For India, it was the perfect end to a day when they saw their newly promoted opener Rohit Sharma (127, 149 balls) score his second ton of the match and No. 3 Cheteshwar Pujara (81, 148 balls) shifti ng gears at t he ri ght moment to take the hosts to a commanding position.

“I think there is enough rough for the spinners and the cracks will open up bit more on Day 5,” Pujara said at the end of the day’s play. “The cracks will help the fast bowlers and we have seen that the pitch has got variable bounce. Like the variable bounce for Jaddu in that delivery against Elgar, I think the ball hit the crack and kept a little low. So if there is variable bounce I think the spinners will enjoy hitting the ball on the cracks.”

The day started with the last three South African batsmen batM Agarwal c du Plessis b Maharaj 7 R Sharma st de Kock b Maharaj 127 C Pujara lbw Philander 81 R Jadeja b Rabada 40 V Kohli not out 31 A Rahane not out 27 Extras (b-8, lb-2) 10 Total (4 wickets dec) 323 FOW: 1-21, 2-190, 3-239, 4-286 ting for close to an hour. They put on 46 and reduced India’s lead to 71 runs. With a possibilit­y of rain and a SA batting that fought doggedly in first innings, the Indian team management knew that they had to give their bowlers the maximum time to pick 10 wickets.

So, Sharma started with the right intent from the word go and hit seven sixes en route to the three-figure mark. But at the other end, while Mayank Agarwal fell cheaply off Keshav Maharaj, No. 3 Pujara took a long time to settle. He scored his first runs off the 20th ball and by the 62nd ball had only put on 8 runs.

It is typical of Pujara to take his time to get into rhythm but the need of the hour was different. A message from the dressing room post lunch did wonders. Kuldeep Yadav ran in and seemed to tell him about the captain’s instructio­n to charge the bowlers. Suddenly Pujara was in a different avatar. If Sharma preferred the aerial route, Pujara was all about finding the gaps. After a rather off-colour tour of the West Indies, this was the innings that Pujara needed to come into his own. From 8 off 62 balls, he reached 50 off 106 balls. At one point he matched Sharma’s pace.

Pujara’s was not a chanceless knock though as he was dropped twice off Piedt—first by Aiden Markram at short leg and then by wicketkeep­er Quinton de Kock.

The hosts were not complainin­g. From 35/1 at lunch, the duo added 140 runs in the second session and India’s lead swelled.

Bowling:

Philander 12-5-21-1, Maharaj 22-0-129-2, Rabada 13-3-41-1, Piedt 17-3-102-0, Muthusamy 3-0-20-0.

A. Markram not out D. Elgar lbw b Jadeja T. de Bruyn not out Extras (lb-1) Total (for 1 wkt, 9 overs) FOW: 1-4 Bowling: Ashwin 5-2-7-0, Jadeja 4-2-3-1. 3 2 5 1 11

 ??  ?? India captain Virat Kohli (left) congratula­tes Rohit Sharma after the opener was dismissed for 127 on Sunday in Visakhapat­nam.
AFP PHOTO
India captain Virat Kohli (left) congratula­tes Rohit Sharma after the opener was dismissed for 127 on Sunday in Visakhapat­nam. AFP PHOTO
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